Thursday, March 31, 2005

The Lovers' Album of the Week


Yo La Tengo Prisoners of Love: A Smattering of Scintillating Senescent Songs 1985 - 2003 along with A Shattering of Outtakes and Rarities

During the Summer of `96, I fell madly in love with Elvis Costello's rendition of the ol' Cole Porter song "Love for Sale." I had heard it while driving a friend's car who happened to have the Costello album Trust in his tape deck. For months I begged my friend to make me a mix tape with that song and when he finally got around to it he had added a few more artists that he thought I should check out including Nick Drake and NRBQ. But the mix tape primarily consisted of selections from Yo La Tengo's 1990 release Fakebook, an album of cleverly chosen covers (the Kinks, Cat Stevens, Daniel Johnston) and a handful of beautiful originals ("Can't Forget" and "The Summer"). When I eventually purchased the real album, it struck me funny that my friend had included all but three songs from the original. It was if he was so in love with that album that he had had a hard time disregarding anything from it. So I could only imagine the daunting task of putting together Yo La Tengo's latest release, Prisoners of Love, a double disc retrospective covering an 18 year (!) career. Instead of following chronological order, Prisoners jumps back and forth through the years to create an album that would deem enjoyable to both the novice and the fanatic. Selections include tracks from the earliest years ("The River of Water" from the first 7 inch) to the latest releases ("Season of the Shark," "Little Eyes") as well as their most achingly beautiful ("You Can Have It All," Our Way To Fall," "Tears Are In Your Eyes") and most challenging rockers ("From a Motel 6," "Tom Courtenay," "Sugarcube"). Of course, it is impossible to include everything (What, no “Big Sky”?) but it's hard to dismiss any of the carefully chosen picks. The greatest thrill of Prisoners of Love, though, is an optional third disc which gives us 16 tracks of outtakes and rarities including 5 tunes that had previously been unreleased. One listen to "Pencil Test," an outtake from 1997's I Can Hear the Heart Beating As One, will have you scratchin' your head with wonder at how a song so lovingly could be left off any album. But when you have such a great catalog of material like Yo La Tengo, you make things hard for folks like my friend who made that mix tape so many years ago. Last week for the first time on the Music Lovers, I played four songs in a row from one artist. How fitting that it was the darlings of indie rock, Yo La Tengo.

The Music Lovers playlist for 3/31/05

1. Beverly Hills - Weezer from Make Believe 2. Shouldn't Be Long - Tiger Mountain from Get Along Like A House On Fire 3. Hey Now Now - The Cloud Room from The Cloud Room 4. I Am Six Pounds of Dynamite - South San Gabriel from The Carlton Chronicles: Not Until the Operations Through 5. An Honest Mistake - The Bravery from The Bravery 6. Lullaby To Holly - Alasdair Roberts from Misplace Pets 7. I Will Never See the Sun - Great Lake Swimmers from Great Lake Swimmers 8. I Can't Wait - Shearwater from Thieves 9. Immaculate Heart - American Analog Set from Songs of Hurt and Healing 10. Day - White Magic from Songs of Hurt and Healing 11. Knight Errant - David Grubbs from A Guess At the Riddle 12. I Turn My Camera On - Spoon from Gimme Fiction 13. Feel Good Inc - Gorillaz from Demon Days 14. Bells - Electrelane from Axes 15. Turtle and the Flightless Bird - Devin Davis from Lonely People of the World, Unite! 16. Scrabble Heart - Montag from Live at KVRX 17. The River of Water - Yo La Tengo from Prisoners of Love 18. Dreaming - Yo La Tengo from A Smattering of Outtakes and Rarities 19. Big Day Coming (Demo) - Yo La Tengo from A Smattering of Outtakes and Rarities 20. Pencil Test - Yo La Tengo from A Smattering of Outtakes and Rarities 21. Better Off Dead - Dead from Above 1979 from Better Off Dead Single 22. Loveless - Tullycraft from Singles 23. Superheroes of BMX - Mogwai from Goverment Commissions BBC Sessions 1996 - 2003 24. This Modern Love - Bloc Party from Silent Alarm 25. Earthquake Weather - Beck from Guero 26. We Both Go Down Together - The Decemberists from Picaresque 27. Time Stops - Teenage Fanclub from Man-Made 28. Last Night I Dreamed That Somebody Loved Me - Morrissey from Live from Earls Court

Tuesday, March 29, 2005

Easley Studios - Follow Up


As I mentioned a few weeks ago, the legendary Easley Studios suffered a major setback after a fire broke out putting many artists' master tapes in jeopardy. Memphis' own, The Glass, were one of several artists that were laying down tracks there. Here's an official announcement from The Glass' website:

Our record was lost in the Easley/McCain Studio fire. Well, not utterly. A few files were salvaged - a few tracks were spared. After our April tour we'll head up into a cabin in the Ozarks and along with our faithful engineer, attempt to better those lost recordings. Thanks to everyone for their patience, the new and improved record will come out this summer.

I will continue to keep everyone updated.